withoutaface
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- Jul 14, 2004
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- 2004
Please Even though I'm personally conflicted on the idea of euthanasia, if this particular civilian had asked to be killed, or if the bullet had gone somewhere that would have rendered them a vegetable, it is not objectively wrong to terminate their life.berry580 said:No, its not.
But how about look it "this" way- in one incident, an America militant assaulted a town/village in Iraq because the Americans claimed to search for "terrorists". In the process, an Iraqi civilian was shot, and after, this Iraqi civilian was murdered by an American.
This was made public, and the US soldier who killed this civilian was pleaded "innocent" as he justified it was to "free him from pain".
So $8000 + is cheap to liberate one human life, what about $1 to eliminate a human life?
Remember an incident in America where a women is in a coma and is declared "brain dead", yet it created an "outcry" in America when her husband wanted her to be killed while her parents opposed?
So killing a brain dead women who's in a coma for decades would create an "outcry" in America, but murdering a shot man who is still alive would create a "no American gives a d@mn"?
So why the difference? Is it because that man is an Iraqi while that woman is an American?
Is that called discrimination, or should it be called hypocrisy?
How is the reaction of American society relevant to my own personal view? It's not the societies fault anyway, it's the media, who I think we've already established are sensationalist when we were discussing the case of Schapelle Corby in relation to other Australians overseas. The media concentrates the outcry on a small amount of things because it serves them better to have people feeling very strongly for one cause than somewhat perturbed about many.